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Query: EC:3.6.3.44 (
P-glycoprotein
)
13,344
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Multidrug resistance
P-glycoprotein
2 (Mdr2) is a phospholipid translocator in the canalicular membrane that is essential for the formation of biliary phospholipid vesicles and mixed lipid/bile
salt
micelles. Incorporation into biliary vesicles and micelles is thought to contribute to the hepatobiliary excretion of certain hydrophobic organic anions, such as indocyanine green (ICG). The present studies characterized the biliary excretion of two hydrophobic organic anions, ICG and estradiol-17beta(beta-D-glucuronide) (E(2)17G), in the single-pass isolated perfused liver and the biliary excretion of glutathione (GSH) in vivo in wild-type and Mdr2-/- female mice. The biliary excretion of ICG (0.4 micromol) was reduced by 90%, while the biliary excretion of total GSH was decreased by 65% in Mdr2-/- mice relative to wild-type mice. In contrast, the biliary excretion of E(2)17G (0.1 micromol) was increased by 30% in Mdr2-/- mice. These data indicate that the absence of Mdr2 differentially influences the biliary excretion of these organic anions and suggest that phospholipid vesicles and mixed micelles in bile are essential for the biliary excretion of ICG.
...
PMID:Multidrug resistance p-glycoprotein 2 is essential for the biliary excretion of indocyanine green. 1130 27
Scavenger receptor class B, type I (SR-BI) is expressed in the intestines of rodents and has been suggested to be involved in the absorption of dietary cholesterol. The aim of this study was to determine whether intestinal SR-BI expression is affected in animal models with altered bile delivery to the intestine and impaired cholesterol absorption. SR-BI protein and mRNA levels were determined in proximal and distal small intestine from control, bile-duct-ligated and bile-diverted rats and from control and bile-duct-ligated mice. Two genetically altered mouse models were studied: multidrug resistance-2
P-glycoprotein
-deficient [Mdr2((-/-))] mice that produce phospholipid/cholesterol-free bile, and cholesterol 7alpha-hydroxylase-deficient [Cyp7a((-/-))] mice, which exhibit qualitative and quantitative changes in the bile-
salt
pool. Cholesterol-absorption efficiency was quantified using a dual-isotope ratio method. SR-BI was present at the apical membrane of enterocytes in control rats and mice and was more abundant in proximal than in distal segments of the intestine. In bile-duct-ligated animals, levels of SR-BI protein were virtually absent and mRNA levels were decreased by approximately 50%. Bile-diverted rats, Mdr2((-/-)) mice and Cyp7a((-/-)) mice showed decreased levels of intestinal SR-BI protein while mRNA levels were unaffected. Cholesterol absorption was reduced by >90% in bile-duct-ligated and bile-diverted animals and in Cyp7a((-/-)) mice, whereas Mdr2((-/-)) mice showed an approximately 50% reduction. This study shows that SR-BI is expressed at the apical membrane of enterocytes of rats and mice, mainly in the upper intestine where cholesterol absorption is greatest, and indicates that bile components play a role in post-transcriptional regulation of SR-BI expression. Factors associated with cholestasis appear to be involved in transcriptional control of intestinal SR-BI expression. The role of SR-BI in the cholesterol-absorption process remains to be defined.
...
PMID:Down-regulation of intestinal scavenger receptor class B, type I (SR-BI) expression in rodents under conditions of deficient bile delivery to the intestine. 1136 57
The objective of this study was to examine whether ion pair complexation with endogenous bile salts in hepatocytes contributes to the preferential biliary excretion of organic cations (OCs). Tributylmethylammonium (TBuMA; mol wt 200) and triethylmethylammonium (TEMA; mol wt 116) were selected as model OCs that exhibit significant and negligible biliary excretion, respectively, in rats. The apparent lipophilicity of TBuMA, but not that of TEMA, was increased by the presence of either rat bile or specific bile salts, suggesting the formation of lipophilic ion pair complexes for TBuMA with bile salts in the liver. The uptake of TBuMA into canalicular liver plasma membrane (cLPM) vesicles, but not that of TEMA, was increased in the presence of bile salts, with a significant increase for both ATP-dependent transport and passive diffusion. The uptake of TBuMA in the presence of the bile salts was inhibited by representative
P-glycoprotein
(
P-gp
) substrates and vice versa, suggesting the involvement of
P-gp
in the canalicular excretion of TBuMA-bile
salt
complexes in vivo. Increased affinity toward
P-gp
is suggested as the mechanism responsible for the increased ATP-dependent transport for the ion pair complexes. We propose that ion pair formation with bile slats in hepatocytes may be responsible for the preferential biliary excretion of high-molecular-weight OCs including TBuMA.
...
PMID:Contribution of ion pair complexation with bile salts to biliary excretion of organic cations in rats. 1144 32
Bile-
salt
hydrophobicity regulates biliary phospholipid secretion and subselection. The aim of this study was to determine whether bile salts can influence liver plasma membrane phospholipids and fluidity in relation to the ATP-dependent transporter. Rats were depleted of bile salts by overnight biliary diversion and then sodium taurocholate was infused intravenously at a constant rate (200 nmol/min per 100 g of body weight), followed by infusion of bile salts with various hydrophobicities (taurochenodeoxycholate, tauroursodeoxycholate, tauro-beta-muricholate, tauro-alpha-muricholate at 200 nmol/min per 100 g of body weight). The hydrophobicity of the infused bile salts correlated with that of biliary phospholipids, but was inversely related to that of the canalicular membrane bilayer. Canalicular membrane fluidity (estimated by 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene fluorescence depolarization) and expression of multidrug-resistance proteins (Mrp2, Mrp3) and apical Na(+)-dependent bile-
salt
transporter (ASBT) were increased by hydrophilic bile salts, although there was no marked change in the expression of
P-glycoprotein
subfamilies (Mdr2). Bile-
salt
export pump (Bsep) expression was increased along with increasing bile-
salt
hydrophobicity. Bile salts modulate canalicular membrane phospholipids and membrane fluidity, as well as the ATP-dependent transporter expression and function, and these actions are associated with their hydrophobicity. The cytoprotective effect of hydrophilic bile salts seems to be associated with induction of Mrp2, Mrp3 and ASBT.
...
PMID:Bile-salt hydrophobicity is a key factor regulating rat liver plasma-membrane communication: relation to bilayer structure, fluidity and transporter expression and function. 1167 35
Hepatic complications in erythropoietic protoporphyria (EPP) have been attributed to toxic actions of accumulated protoporphyrin (PP). PP can only be removed via the bile but transport systems involved have not been defined. The aim of this study was to gain insight in the mode of biliary PP excretion, with emphasis on the potential contribution of the Mdr1
P-glycoprotein
export pump and biliary lipids as PP carriers. Control mice and mice homozygous for Mdr1a/b (Abcb1) or Mdr2 (Abcb4) gene disruption, the latter unable to secrete phospholipids and cholesterol into bile, were treated with griseofulvin to chemically induce protoporphyria. All groups showed dramatically increased PP levels in erythrocytes and liver after griseofulvin treatment. Histologically, massive PP deposits were found in livers of control and Mdr1a/b(-/-) mice but not in those of Mdr2(-/-) mice. Serum unesterified cholesterol and phospholipids were increased by griseofulvin because of formation of lipoprotein-X in control and Mdr1a/b(-/-) mice only. Yet, bile flow was not impaired in griseofulvin-treated mice, and biliary bile
salt
, phospholipid, and cholesterol secretion rates were significantly increased. Surprisingly, biliary PP excretion was similar in all 3 groups of griseofulvin-treated mice: the observed linear relationship between hepatic and biliary PP concentrations and identical liver-to-bile concentration ratios in treated and untreated mice suggest a passive mode of excretion. In conclusion, the data show that Mdr P-glycoproteins are not critically involved in biliary removal of excess PP and indicate that the presence of biliary lipids is required for formation of intrahepatic PP deposits.
...
PMID:Mdr P-glycoproteins are not essential for biliary excretion of the hydrophobic heme precursor protoporphyrin in a griseofulvin-induced mouse model of erythropoietic protoporphyria. 1182 2
Vertex is developing biricodar as a chemosensitizing agent designed to restore the effectiveness of chemotherapeutic agents in tumor multidrug resistance. By November 1998, phase II trials had commenced for biricodar, in combination with chemotherapy, for five common cancer indications: breast, ovarian, soft-tissue sarcomas, small cell lung cancer and prostate cancer. Phase II trials were ongoing in January 2002. By March 2000, Vertex was the sole developer of biricodar, as an agreement made in 1996 with BioChem Pharma (now Shire Pharmaceuticals), for the development and marketing of biricodar in Canada was terminated. Biricodar is the free base compound, which also has a citrate
salt
analog known as VX-710-3. Vertex has published three patents, WO-09615101, WO-09636630 and WO-09736869, disclosing derivatives of biricodar that are claimed for the treatment of multidrug resistant protein and
P-glycoprotein
-mediated multidrug resistant tumors. In January 2002, a Banc of America analyst report forecast that biricodar had a 30% chance of reaching the market with a launch date in the second half of 2005, with peak sales estimated at $250 million.
...
PMID:Biricodar. Vertex Pharmaceuticals. 1209 May 59
Nucleotide efflux (especially cyclic nucleotides) from a variety of mammalian tissues, bacteria, and lower eukaryotes has been studied for several decades. However, the molecular identity of these nucleotide efflux transporters remained elusive, despite extensive knowledge of their kinetic properties and inhibitor profiles. Identification of the subfamily of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) binding cassette transporters, multidrug resistance protein (MRP) subfamily, permitted rapid advances because some recently identified MRP family members transport modified nucleotide analogs (ie, chemotherapeutic agents). We first identified, MRP4, based on its ability to efflux antiretroviral compounds, such as azidothymidine monophosphate (AZT-MP) and 9-(2-phosphonyl methoxyethyl) adenine (PMEA), in drug-resistant and also in transfected cell lines. MRP5, a close structural homologue of MRP4 also transported PMEA. MRP4 and MRP5 confer resistance to cytotoxic thiopurine nucleotides, and we demonstrate MRP4 expression varies among acute lymphoblastic leukemias, suggesting this as a factor in response to chemotherapy with these agents. The ability of MRP4 and MRP5 to transport 3',5'-cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) and 3',5'-cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) suggests they may play a biological role in cellular signaling by these nucleotides. Finally, we propose that MRP4 may also play a role in hepatic bile acid homeostasis because loss of the main bile acid efflux transporter, sister of
P-glycoprotein
(SPGP) aka bile-
salt
export pump (BSEP), leads to a strong compensatory upregulation in MRP4 expression. Cumulatively, these studies reveal that the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters MRP4 and MRP5 have a unique role in biology and in chemotherapeutic response.
...
PMID:Role of MRP4 and MRP5 in biology and chemotherapy. 1242 63
The methylthioadenosine phosphorylase (MTAP) gene gained considerable interest as therapeutic target for tumors with the 9p21 deletion. This gene maps to 9p21 and loss of this chromosomal region in tumors offers an unique opportunity for chemoselective treatment, since MTAP is an important salvage enzyme for the formation of adenine that is needed for DNA synthesis.
L-Alanosine
, an antibiotic from Streptomyces alanosinicus, blocks the common de novo purine biosynthesis pathway and, thereby, inhibits tumor cells with MTAP deficiency. Normal cells escape the detrimental effects of L-alanosine due to their proficiency in the MTAP salvage pathway. The present analysis was undertaken to gain insights into the molecular architecture of tumor cells that determines the response to L-alanosine apart from the MTAP gene. Analysis of cell doubling times and IC(50) values for L-alanosine showed that slowly growing cell lines were more resistant to L-alanosine than rapidly growing ones. Mining the database of the National Cancer Institute (N.C.I.), for the mRNA expression of 9706 genes in 60 cell lines by means of Kendall's tau-test, false discovery rate calculation, and hierarchical cluster analysis pointed to 11 genes or expressed sequence tags whose mRNA expression correlated with the IC(50) values for L-alanosine. Furthermore, we tested L-alanosine for cross-resistance in multidrug-resistant cell lines which overexpress selectively either the
P-glycoprotein
/MDR1 (CEM/ADR5000), MRP1 (HL-60/AR), or BCRP (MDA-MB-231-BCRP) genes. None of the multidrug-resistant cell lines was cross-resistant to L-alanosine indicating that L-alanosine may be suitable to treat multidrug-resistant, refractory tumors in the clinic. Finally, the IC(50) values for L-alanosine of the 60 cell lines were correlated to the p53 mutational status and expression of p53 downstream genes. We found that p53 mutated cell lines were more resistant to L-alanosine than p53 wild type cell lines.
...
PMID:Identification of gene expression profiles predicting tumor cell response to L-alanosine. 1290 26
Intrahepatic cholestasis is often associated with impairment of biliary bile acid secretion, a process mediated by the sister of
P-glycoprotein
(Spgp or Abcb11) also known as the bile salt export pump (Bsep). In humans, mutations in the Spgp gene are associated with a fatal childhood disease, type 2 progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis (PFIC2). However in mice, the "knockout" of Spgp only results in mild cholestasis. In this study, we fed spgp(-/-) knockout mice with a cholic acid (CA)-supplemented diet to determine whether a more pronounced PFIC2-like phenotype could be induced. Such mice developed severe cholestasis characterized by jaundice, weight loss, elevated plasma bile acid, elevated transaminase, cholangiopathy (proliferation of bile ductules and cholangitis), liver necrosis, high mortality, and wide-ranging changes in the mRNA expression of major liver genes (16/36 examined). A surprising observation was that the bile acid output and bile flow in CA-fed mutant mice was significantly higher than anticipated. This suggests that the spgp(-/-) mice are able to utilize an alternative bile
salt
transport system. However, unlike Spgp, this system is insufficient to protect the knockout mice from cholestasis despite its high capacity. In conclusion, the spgp(-/-) mice provide a unique model to investigate molecular pathways associated with cholestasis and related diseases.
...
PMID:Severe cholestasis induced by cholic acid feeding in knockout mice of sister of P-glycoprotein. 1464 60
Major determinants of the bioavailability of drugs are the degree of intestinal absorption and the hepatic first-pass effect. Drugs need to overcome several membrane barriers before reaching the systemic circulation, each of which expresses an array of specialized transport proteins for drug uptake or efflux. The
P-glycoprotein
MDR1 (multidrug resistance gene product, ABCB1) is expressed at the apical surface of enterocytes, where it mediates the efflux of xenobiotics into the intestinal lumen before these can access the portal circulation. Increased expression of MDR1 reduces the bioavailability of MDR1 substrates such as digoxin, cyclosporin, and taxol. Numerous xenobiotics can induce the MDR1 gene through activation of the nuclear pregnane X receptor (PXR). This explains the risk for drug interactions that is inherent to pharmacotherapy with PXR ligands such as rifampin, phenobarbital, statins, and St. John's wort. Other PXR-regulated genes include cytochrome P450 3A4, the digoxin and bile
salt
transporter Oatp2 (organic anion transporting polypeptide 2, Slc01a4) of the basolateral hepatocyte membrane, and the xenobiotic efflux pump Mrp2 (multidrug resistance associated protein 2, Abcc2) of the canalicular hepatocyte membrane. A second orphan nuclear receptor that is activated by xenobiotics is the constitutive androstane receptor (CAR), which induces Mrp2 and Mrp3 (Abcc3). The PXR and CAR are thus important "xenosensors" that mediate drug-induced activation of the detoxifying transport and enzyme systems in liver and intestine.
...
PMID:Regulation of drug and bile salt transporters in liver and intestine. 1470 63
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